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JOURNAL SCOPE

Food Science of Animal Resources (Food Sci. Anim. Resour.) is an international, peer-reviewed journal publishing original research and review articles on scientific and technological aspects of chemistry, biotechnology, processing, engineering, and microbiology of meat, egg, and dairy products.

EDITORIAL POLICY

Originality

Food Science of Animal Resources (Food Sci. Anim. Resour.) is an international, peer-reviewed journal publishing original research and review articles on scientific and technological aspects of chemistry, biotechnology, processing, engineering, and microbiology of meat, egg, and dairy products.

Editorial review and revision

All papers will be critically evaluated by at least two anonymous reviewers, selected for their competence in the subject area of the manuscript. Food Sci. Anim. Resour. uses double-blind review, which means the identities of the authors are concealed from the reviewers, and vice versa. Acceptance of the paper will depend upon its scientific merit and suitability for the journal. A paper may be accepted in its original form or subject to revision. The reviewers' (and editor's) suggestions will be informed to the author, who will have an opportunity to revise the paper. The editor is responsible for the final decision. Resubmission of rejected manuscript will not be allowed.

The usual reasons for rejection are topics that are too specific and target audience that is too limited, insufficient originality, serious scientific flaws, poor quality of illustrations, or absence of a message that might be important to readers. The peer review process takes usually four to eight weeks after the manuscript submission.

Revisions are usually requested to take account of criticisms and comments made by referees. The revised manuscript should be resubmitted via the web system. Failure to resubmit the revised manuscript within 2 months without any notice from the corresponding author is regarded as a withdrawal. The corresponding author must indicate clearly what alterations have been made in response to the referee's comments point by point. Acceptable reasons should be given for noncompliance with any recommendation of the referees.

Manuscripts written by authors who are unsure of proper English usage should be checked by someone proficient in the English language before submitting. Manuscripts failing to meet the standards, poorly written or formatted are editorially rejected without further review.

Proofs

Galley proofs in PDF format for an accepted article will be sent by e-mail to the corresponding author for the correction of any editorial errors, not for addition of new material or revision of the text. Excessive alteration of an article is not allowed during galley proof reading. Significant changes to the article as accepted for publication will only be considered at this stage with permission from the Editor. The proofs should be corrected and mailed to the Editorial Office within 72 h.

Publication charges

The current charge for publication is 70 US dollars (or 70,000
Korean Won) per page. Additionally, 100 US dollars (or
100,000 Korean Won) will be charged for color print per page
for all authors. Invited review is exempt from page charges.

Reprints

Reprints will be provided upon request. It will cost 50 US dollars (or 50,000 Korean Won) for 20 copies.

Copyright

The corresponding author is responsible for signing a copyright transfer agreement on behalf of all authors. This agreement form is sent to the corresponding author when the manuscript is accepted and scheduled for publication.

HOW TO SUBMIT MANUSCRIPTS

In principle, the first and corresponding authors should be member of the KoSFA for submission and consideration of manuscripts. Authors should submit their manuscript electronically by using online manuscript submission system (http://www.kosfaj.org/). The “date of receipt” that appears in the published paper will be the date when editorial office received the manuscript.

FILE FORMATS

It is important that the files should be submitted as a format of the word document (.doc or .docx format) which is written in English. Manuscripts should be typed double spaced within 2.5 cm margins on all sides. The font size should be no smaller than 12 points and Times New Roman font is preferred. Special characters (e.g., Greek, symbols) should be inserted to use the symbols menu bar available in this font.

Every page of the manuscript should be page and line numbered. Lines must be numbered consecutively throughout the manuscript, not per page. The title page file and manuscript file should be uploaded separately. The title page file should be included:

Place an asterisk after the name of the corresponding author. The affiliation address for each author except the first and corresponding authors should be indicated by superscript Arabic numbers (1, 2, 3, etc). The manuscript file should not include the author’s information. It must include the abstract, main text, references, and figure legends followed by tables and figures in a single word file for initial submission. Each figure should be labeled with a figure number. Figures can be uploaded in a separate file if it is necessary.

ORGANIZATION AND STYLES OF MANUSCRIPTS

Manuscripts have four types; Articles, Notes, Short Communications, and Mini Reviews

● Articles

Articles are reports of original, scientifically sound research.
Articles should be structured under the section headings
Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion,
Acknowledgment(s), and References. The standard length of a
published Article should be six printed pages long including
tables and figures, which is approximately the equivalent of a
Word document of 12 A4 pages of double- spaced 12 pt Times
New Roman font.

● Short Communications

Short Communications are short reports for the rapid presentation
of new observation. Short Communications should be arranged in
the same way as Articles. Short Communications are no more
than 3,000 words long (without reference) and could contain total
of 3 tables and figures.

● Mini-Reviews

Mini-Reviews provide an analysis of a scientific or applied field,
which include all important findings and bring together reports
from a number of sources. Review articles are normally invited
by the Editor-in-Chief or the Editorial Board. Mini-Reviews
should be structured under appropriate section such as
Introduction, Main issue, Conclusion, and References. There is
no length limitation for Mini-Reviews. Mini-Reviews are
subjected to independent peer review, and the Editor-in-Chief
may request changes, or decide not to proceed with publication.

● The Preparation of Manuscript

Abstract

Abstract should be less than 250 words. The abstract should
contain important objectives, materials and methods, results,
conclusion, and applications. Use complete sentences and
standard terms. Use of abbreviations in the abstract should be
avoided.

Key words

After the abstract, in a separate paragraph, list 3-5 key words or
phrases that can be used for indexing purposes. They should be
typed in lowercase letters and separated by commas. Please
avoid general terms and abbreviations.

Introduction

The introduction presents the purpose of the studies reported
and their relationship to earlier works in the field. It should not
be a mini-review of the literature. Use only those references
required to provide the most salient background to allow the
readers to understand necessary information relevant to the
study.

Materials and Methods

The materials and methods section should be brief but include sufficient technical information to allow the experiments to be repeated by a qualified readers. Cite previously published procedures in References. Source of unusual chemicals or manufacturers of equipment are given with model name, manufacturer name, city, and country (example) Synergy 2 plate reader (Bio Tek, Winooski, USA)

Results and Discussion

The results section should include design of the experiments as
well as the results of the experiments. Results can be presented
in figures, tables, and text. The discussion section should focus
on the significance of the results rather than a repetition of the
results.

Conflict of interest

The corresponding author of an article is asked to inform the Editor of the authors' potential conflicts of interest possibly influencing the research or interpretation of data. A potential conflict of interest should be disclosed in the cover letter even when the authors are confident that their judgments have not been influenced in preparing the manuscript.

Such conflicts may include financial support or private connections, political pressure from interest groups, or academic problems. Disclosure form shall be same with ICMJE Uniform Disclosure Form for Potential Conflicts of Interest (http://www.icmje.org/ coi_disclosure.pdf). The Editor will decide whether the information on the conflict should be included in the published paper. In particular, all sources of funding for a study should be explicitly stated. The conflicts of interest may occur during the research process as well; however, it is important to provide disclosure. If there is a disclosure, editors, reviewers, and reader can approach the manuscript after understanding the situation and the background of the completed research.

Acknowledgment(s)

Acknowledgment(s) of financial support, technical assistance
and so on are given in a separate paragraph.

Author Contributions

What authors have done for the study should be described in this section. To qualify for authorship, all contributors must meet at least one of the seven core contributions by CRediT (conceptualization, methodology, software, validation, formal analysis, investigation, data curation), as well as at least one of the writing contributions (original draft preparation, review and editing). Authors may also satisfy the other remaining contributions; however, these alone will not qualify them for authorship.

Contributions will be published with the final article, and they should accurately reflect contributions to the work. The submitting author is responsible for completing this information at submission, and it is expected that all authors will have reviewed, discussed, and agreed to their individual contributions ahead of this time.

(An example)

Conceptualization: Hong GD.

Data curation: Jang YS, Choi Y.

Formal analysis: Kim CS.

Methodology: Kim Y, Kim GD.

Software: Kim Y, Jang YS.

Validation: Jang YS.

Investigation: Hong GD.

Writing - original draft: Hong GD, Jang YS.

Writing - review & editing: Choi Y, Kim Y, Kim CS.

Ethics approval

Manuscripts reporting studies involving human participants, human data, or animals must include a statement on ethics approval and the name of the ethics committee that approved the study and the committee’s reference number if appropriate.

References

References should be given in the text as Boles and Shand (1998) or (Ardo, 2006; Montero et al., 2000); the first author with et al. is used for papers with three or more authors. Where necessary, papers are distinguished as Kim (2009a), (Ha et al., 2000a; Ha et al., 2000b). When several references appear together in the text, cite them in alphabetical order, and chronological within identical alphabet. The reference list at the end of the paper, is given in strict alphabetical order. Each reference should contain authors' names, with initials (in capitals), the publication year, the title of the paper, the name of the journal in abbreviation, the volume and the page range. Titles of articles originally published in another language should be given in English translation. References to books should include the publisher and the town of publication, with editor(s) and volume and edition number where appropriate. Authors should refer to the most recent issue for the format of references. References to papers accepted for publication but not yet published should show the journal name and, if known, the probable year of publication, and state “in press”. The following types of references are not valid for listing in the References section; unpublished data, personal communication, and manuscripts in preparation or submitted. Abbreviate journal names according to the ISI Journals database. References should take the following examples:

Figure legends

Figure legends should contain a brief description of the experiments so that the figure can be understood without reference to the body of the text. However, the legend should not repeat Materials and Methods or contain interpretive statements.

Tables

Tables should be typewritten, together with their title, separately from the main text and in an appropriate font size to preferably fit each table on a separate page at the end of text after the References. Their lay-out should be suitable for printing as either single column (7.5 cm) or double column (16 cm) width. Avoid vertical rulings (lines) and keep horizontal rulings to a minimum. Each table must be numbered with Arabic numerals (e.g., Table 1, Table 2). Place footnotes to tables below the table body and indicate them with superscript Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3, etc), not symbols. Each column in a table must have a heading, and abbreviations, when necessary, should be defined in the footnotes.

Figures

Figures should be provided separately from the main text. Use Arabic numerals to number all figures (e.g., Fig. 1, Fig. 2) according to their sequence in the text. The figure number must appear well outside the boundaries of the image itself. The preferred symbols for graphs are ○, ●, □, ■, △, ▲, ▽, ▼. Where possible, the same symbol should be used for the same quantity in different figures. Blurred images will not be accepted. The author(s) will be required to pay for reproduction of color photographs. Any figures submitted in color will be reviewed and processed with the understanding that the figure will be published in color.

UNITS, ABBREVIATIONS AND NOMENCLATURE

Authors should consult a current issue for guidance. Always use Arabic numerals with units. All abbreviations should be defined at their first use in the text only; do not repeat the definition of abbreviations thereafter. SI and metric units should be used whenever possible. Please always leave a space between the number and the unit except %, ℃, and ; e.g. 100 mM not 100mM. If you use %, always state if this is v/v, w/v, v/w or w/w. Abbreviations are never made plural. Mixtures of solvents are given as chloroform/methanol (2:1, v/v) or methanol/water/acetic acid (60:35:5, by vol.). Followings are the example of unit style.

Unit

Abbreviation

Unit

Abbreviation

nanometer

5 nm

significant at

p<0.05

micrometer

3 mm

percent

35%

centimeter

4 cm

concentration

30% (w/v), 0.15 mg%, 10 ppm

meter

5 m

pressure

750 mmHg, Pa, Torr

microliter

7 µL

pH

pH 5.0

milliliter

2 mL

centipoise

20 cp

liter

20 L

water activity

aw

milligram

6 mg

deoxyribonucleic acid

DNA

gram

35 g

ribonucleic acid

RNA

kilogram

15 kg

immunoglobulin

Ig

micromolar

3 µM

lightness

CIE L*

millimolar

7 mM

redness

CIE a*

molarity

1×10-2 M

yellowness

CIE b*

second

20 s

gravity

12,000×g

minute

1.5 min

count per minute

5 cpm

hour

4.5 h

revolutions per minute

10 rpm

day

5 d

kilo gray

7.0 kGy

week

2 wk

range

2.5-6.5 mg

month

2 mon

equation

(a+b)/(c+d)

volt

12 V

standard deviation

SD

velocity

50 mm/min, 35 m/s

optical density

OD

temperature

45℃

relative humidity

RH

colony count

9.2×103 CFU/g, Log CFU/g

calorie

cal, kcal

Standard error of means

SEM

This guideline applied to the manuscript to be published after December 2018.